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Nginx Troubleshooting

Nginx Troubleshooting

By : Alexey Kapranov
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Nginx Troubleshooting

Nginx Troubleshooting

By: Alexey Kapranov

Overview of this book

Nginx is clearly winning the race to be the dominant software to power modern websites. It is fast and open source, maintained with passion by a brilliant team. This book will help you maintain your Nginx instances in a healthy and predictable state. It will lead you through all the types of problems you might encounter as a web administrator, with a special focus on performance and migration from older software. You will learn how to write good configuration files and will get good insights into Nginx logs. It will provide you solutions to problems such as missing or broken functionality and also show you how to tackle performance issues with the Nginx server. A special chapter is devoted to the art of prevention, that is, monitoring and alerting services you may use to detect problems before they manifest themselves on a big scale. The books ends with a reference to error and warning messages Nginx could emit to help you during incident investigations.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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8
A. Rare Nginx Error Messages
9
Index

Preface

You will learn how to notes problems before your boss calls you about some pages not loading. You will learn how to find those problems using logs and your usual Linux toolbox. You will also learn how to minimize the probability of problems happening again.

Nginx started as a web accelerator reverse proxy inside one of the big Russian web companies of the early 2000s. The main web server software was Apache 1.3, and it started to show architectural problems serving thousands of relatively slow clients using the old process-based model. Smart web engineers were already building two-tier systems of light frontends based on the mod_proxy Apache module or even used the squid caching proxy in the reverse proxy mode.

The early predecessor of Nginx was named mod_accel, and it was also implemented as an Apache module. The mod_accel module gained some popularity among the administrators of some of the busiest websites, but it is nothing compared with what Nginx later enjoyed. Both of them are built on the idea that the additional level of proxying on the server side of a busy website is a good thing, providing both the extra flexibility and separating the job of serving slow clients from the actual response generation.

Nginx took the idea of mod_proxy module to the extreme by being a self-sufficient separate HTTP server with a goal to solve the so-called C10K problem, that is, serving 10,000 concurrent connections. The numbers do not look impressive at all in 2016, but they did in 2007 when Nginx first claimed a significant share of 1% of the Web according to Netcraft.

Since that time, the share grew manifold while Nginx steadily gained new functionality and remained the ideal open source success story project with a single, talented developer devoting his genius to producing free quality software, which the whole Web could benefit from.

In 2011, a commercial enterprise named Nginx, Inc. was founded, which allowed even more freedom for the developers (now a team). The firm provides both support services and a special subscription-based extended version of the software named Nginx Plus. We will mention some of the Nginx Plus features in the sixth chapter.

In 2016, Nginx is a great tool many businesses are built upon. However, it is still just a tool which requires a master to show its full potential. If you want to understand what is going on in your web server, to be able to write correct Nginx configuration files and read Nginx logs, and if you want your web server to be very fast, you will have to become that master.

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